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Species

Species. a 3 weeks block in „Great Ideas” of Science George Kampis Basler Chair, ETSU, Spring 2007. The concept of species. Species: links to fundamental ideas in sci What is a spec ies ? --> Species problem, SP. (Is it important? well: (1) taxonomy and everyday life(use),

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Species

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  1. Species a 3 weeks block in „Great Ideas” of Science George Kampis Basler Chair, ETSU, Spring 2007

  2. The concept of species • Species: links to fundamental ideas in sci • What is a species? --> Species problem, SP. • (Is it important? well: • (1) taxonomy and everyday life(use), • (2) explanation • (3) philosophy: undertand "Nature", and the "nature of things" - ontology)

  3. History of the species concept • categories, • fixism, • population, • anti-essentialism, • problems (language etc) • …

  4. Categories • folk biology (1970 as anthropo, but 10,000 yrs as user): B.Berlin, S.Atran, etc. • Aristotle: types, categories, essences /accidents, stability • category theory (membership, kind as explanation, cf folk biology) • immutability (cf Plato's "ideas", A finds them in nature: "joints of nature", P) • natural kinds (eg elements, particles.... etc).

  5. Fixism • Bible, scholasticism, Linne. "evolution" as exctinction/creation: Cuvier etc. • Linnaeus recognized that variation was possible within a species, but was not always sure where one species left off and another began. • http://evolution-facts.org/Ev-V3/3evlch29a.htm

  6. Populations, background • revolution in 19c.: • A. Smith: distance is time (geol. layers, but also sometimes exposed/cut off) • layers etc were known before but not understood. • Next: Lyell, father of g., principle: "uniformitarian" p.

  7. Populations, Lyell • Lyell's "Presentism" or "Actualism" • The subtitle of Lyell's Principles was "Being an Attempt to Explain the Former Changes of the Earth's Surface, by Reference to Causes Now in Operation." It is pretty clear that in restricting geological theories to causes that we can observe acting in the present, Lyell wanted to rule out catastrophes on methodological grounds. No catastrophes are observed in the present. So, it is illegitimate to postulate them acting in the past in order to explain the present state of things. • Lyell was appealing to a particularly strong version of the vera causa principle. He was in close contact with Herschel during this period and was well-acquainted with Herschel's views prior to the publication of the Preliminary Discourse in 1830. • Many geologists (Sedgwick, Conybeare, Agassiz) rejected Lyell's presentism. • http://branemrys.blogspot.com/2005/02/darwins-logic-preliminaries-vera-causa.html

  8. Vera causa vs relevant explanation • C.G. Hempel deductive nomological theory • The concept of general law, „covering law” • More importantly, relevance • Relevant = helps you believe/bring forth • Combines causal efficacy, believability and manipulability

  9. Lyell, cont’d • Lyell adds process. Sediments, etc, • and forces: (waves, wind, rain etc) • creationism: wonder about geology/graphy, "how come". • humble forces, 4 billion yrs of destruction (and some buildup). • difficult to believe until... but even then: • The analogous problem of continental drift (the creationism problem of geol).

  10. Continental drift • refers to the movement of the Earth's continents relative to each other. • Frank Bursley Taylor had proposed the concept in a Geological Society of America meeting in 1908 and published his work in the GSA Bulletin in June 1910.[1]Abraham Ortelius, Francis Bacon, Antonio Snider-Pellegrini, Benjamin Franklin, and others had noted earlier that the shapes of continents on either side of the Atlantic Ocean (most notably, Africa and South America) seem to fit together. The similarity of southern continent fossilfaunae and some geological formations had led a small number of Southern hemisphere geologists to conjecture as early as 1900[citation needed] that all the continents had once been joined into a supercontinent known as Pangaea. Frank Bursley Taylor suggested that the continents were dragged towards the equator by increased lunar gravity during the Cretaceous, thus forming the Himalaya and Alps on the southern faces. • Alfred Wegener was the first to formally publish the hypothesis that the continents had somehow "drifted" apart. However, he was unable to provide a convincing explanation for the physical processes which might have caused this drift. His suggestion that the continents had been pulled apart by the centrifugal pseudoforce of the Earth's rotation was considered unrealistic by the scientific community.[2] • The hypothesis received support through the controversial years from South African geologist Alexander Du Toit as well as from Arthur Holmes. The idea of continental drift did not become widely accepted even as theory until the late 1950s.

  11.  Darwin and the Beagle • On 27 September1825Beagle docked at Woolwich for repairs and fitted out for her new duties at a total cost of £5,913. Her guns were reduced from ten cannons to six and a mizzenmast was added to improve her manoeuvrability, thereby changing her from a brig to a bark (or barque). • Beagle set sail on 22 May1826 for her first voyage, under the command of Captain Pringle Stokes. The mission was to accompany the larger ship HMS Adventure (380 tons) on a hydrographic survey of Patagonia and Tierra del Fuego, under the overall command of the Australian Captain Philip Parker King. • Faced with the more difficult part of the survey in the desolate waters of Tierra del Fuego, Captain Pringle Stokes fell into a deep depression. At Port Famine on the Strait of Magellan he locked himself in his cabin for 14 days, then on 2 August1828 shot himself and died in delirium 12 days later.[1] Captain Parker King then replaced Stokes with the Executive Officer of the Beagle, Lieutenant W.G. Skyring. They sailed to Rio de Janeiro where on 15 December1828 Rear Admiral Sir Robert Otway, commander in chief of the South American station aboard HMS Ganges, named as (temporary) Captain of the Beagle his aide, Flag Lieutenant Robert FitzRoy. • The 23 year old aristocrat FitzRoy proved an able commander and meticulous surveyor. In one incident a group of Fuegians stole a ship's boat, and FitzRoy took their families on board as hostages. Eventually he held two men, a girl and a boy who was given the name of Jemmy Button, and these four native Fuegians were taken back with them when the Beagle returned to Plymouth, England on 14 October1830.

  12. Darwin and the Beagle 2. • The second voyage of HMS Beagle from 27 December1831 to 2 October1836 was the second survey expedition of HMS Beagle, under captain Robert FitzRoy who had taken over command of the ship on its first voyage after her previous captain committed suicide. FitzRoy, fearing the same fate, sought a gentleman companion for the voyage. The student clergyman Charles Darwin took the opportunity, making his name as a naturalist and becoming a renowned author with the publication of his journal which became known as The Voyage of the Beagle. • The Beagle sailed across the Atlantic Ocean then carried out detailed hydrographic surveys around the coasts of the southern part of South America, returning via Tahiti and Australia having circumnavigated the Earth. While the expedition was originally planned to last two years, it lasted almost five. • Darwin spent most of this time exploring on land; three years and three months on land, 18 months at sea. His work made his reputation as a geologist and collector of fossils, and his detailed observations of plants and animals

  13. Darwin, Henslow, Lyell • R. McCormick was the naturalist first.. • Darwin theologist (and almost a physician) • Henslow: priest, D’s job-broker, a highly intellectual man • Gives Lyell’s Principles to D who takes it with him • Imagine the atmosphere of a trip like this. The book is among the very few links D has to „civilization” – or at least to home.

  14. Species in 19c. • "scala naturae", linear order, great chain of being (Charles Bonnet, Contemplation de la nature, 1764) • Lovejoy, Arthur Oncken: The Great Chain of Being: A Study of the History of an Idea, Cambridge, Mass.: Harvard University Press, 1936 • Species in 19c. and their placement in ths structure of knowledge: understand the spirit of time (and of contemporary investigation) • The age of discoveries (of Earth): British Crown. Colonization, surveys, raw materials, etc. • The birth of science as profession: naturalist w/ salary. • Positivism as an ideology: naturalism = observation, „unbiased observer”, e.g. colonel X. • The catalog of the world. Large collections, Protype based description, proliferation of species. • Anectodically, species = specimen, specimen = species, e.g. male and female specimens • (today: variations, variants. Emerging debates: species, subspecies, „variant”) • cf variant kidney. So, even today: prototype = tpye, variation = different class, eg. pathology

  15. Darwin’s discovery • Maybe the biggest discovery in science ever… (that no types, no kinds exist). The discovery of evolution (which was long suspected) is but a consequence. • Variation is extended (is the rule) and (often) continuous • Co-varies with distance and the accessibility of regions. • Large parts of the Origin of Species devoted to this! • „difficulties of classificiation”: sees type, mix, type, etc. • Darwin: space IS time, and time can host a process (of transformation – or, as D. calls it, „transmutation”) • Made possible through abandoning the species concept. • Each species is a mixture (natural polimorphism) • Basis is individual (variant), unity is maintained by cross-reproduction • Debates about Darwin and Wallace… W is a lesser figure. • Origin of Species is NOT about the origin of species…

  16. Darwin’s MILD nominalism: • Box: nominalism, realism. • http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Nominalism • Nominalism arose in reaction to the problem of universals. Specifically, accounting for the fact that some things are of the same type. For example, Fluffy and Kitzler are both cats, or, the fact that certain properties are repeatable, such as: the grass, the shirt, and Kermit the Frog are green. One wants to know in virtue of what are Fluffy and Kitzler both cats, and what makes the grass, the shirt, and Kermit green. • The realist answer is that all the green things are green in virtue of the existence of a universal; a single abstract thing, in this case, that is a part of all the green things. With respect to the colour of the grass, the shirt and Kermit, one of their parts is identical. In this respect, the three parts are literally one. Greenness is repeatable because there is one thing that manifests itself wherever there are green things. • Nominalism denies the existence of universals. The motivation to deny universals flows from several concerns. The first one concerns where they exist. Plato famously held that there is a realm of abstract forms or universals apart from the physical world. Particular physical objects merely exemplify or instantiate the universal. But this raises the question: Where is this universal realm? One possibility is that it is outside of space and time. However, some assert that nothing is outside of space and time. To complicate things, what is the nature of the instantiation or exemplificationrelation? • Conceptualists hold a position intermediate between nominalism and realism, saying that universals exist only within the mind and have no external or substantial reality.

  17. Darwin: species is a convenient tool • But reflects patters of (origin and) extinction as well. • Sampling and the fossile record add to this (connects and separates) • Relative concept: e.g. ring species • http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ring_species

  18. Mayr’s „biological species” • A species is a set of interbreeding • individuals... • Reproductively isolated from others • (e.g. mechanically, behaviorally, in • terms of mating preference, etc.)

  19. New Species Neofelis diardi Neofelis nebulosa http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/sci/tech/6452555.stm ….recent molecular genetic analyses (mtDNA, nuclear DNA sequences, microsatellite variation, and cytogenetic differences) have revealed that there is a strong case for reclassification and the defining of two distinct species of clouded leopard - Neofelis nebulosa (mainland Asia) and Neofelis diardi (Indonesian archipelago).

  20. The Species Problem • interbreeding, cf.above figure • similarity: multidimensional (e.g.gull picture, first smaller, then the color changes… etc) • Species problem is an issue of the general problem of identity (species as individuals, Hull and Ghiselin) • e.g. personal identity (despite metabolism, and sleep, maturation, etc: „we are the same” – what connects?) • “the name” – rigid designator w/ continuity (somebody else’s problem of how to identify) • but can be be maintained across properties by ostension). • e.g. how ships are rebuilt, cf. Neurath’s ship

  21. Family resemblance • An influential idea in the philosophy of language, first proposed by Ludwig Wittgenstein in his book Philosophical Investigations. • Wittgenstein discussed examples of terms which he argued would not admit of a full and complete definition. How, he asks, would one go about giving a definition of "game"? He argued that there is nothing that is common to all games, but rather that games held certain similarities and relations with each other. He admonished his reader not to think, but to look, at the vast range of things that we call games. Some games involve winning and losing, but not all; some are entertaining, but not all; some require skill or luck, but not all. [1] • Similarly, he argued that there is nothing that all "numbers" have in commonPrior to Philosophical Investigations the ideal way to give the meaning of something had been thought to be by specifying both genus and differentia. So a 'triangle' is defined as 'a plane figure (genus) bounded by three straight sides (differentia)'. • Logically, this sort of definition can be seen as a series of conjunctions; A triangle is a plane figure and has three sides. More generally, "P" might be defined using a simple conjunction of "A" and "B":

  22. Family resemblance 2. A disturbing thought: it can be anybody’s family. Cf. the anecdote of MK’s friend the garbage collector Along a series of such pictures (how long?), a road to everyone.

  23. Really my family is… Is there anybody here like me? Cf anecdote w/ Dora at church

  24. How long: Six degrees? More on these (will be/was) at the Basler lecture, March 14, Brown Hall….

  25. Categorization, is it possible? • Quite general q., e.g. planet or not (“When I was your age, Pluto was a planet”) • Some properties are shared, some not

  26. Natural Kinds • Aristotle, Quine: Problem of natural kinds • Problem of induction (cf explanation: by virtue of being a cat, it mieuws, and it MUST do so) • Hempel again: do non-black non-ravens confirm „all ravens are black?” • Projectible predicates • http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Natural_kind • Populational species definition: no natural kind, no projection possible

  27. Natural kinds, cont’d Quine: once you understood it, you dont need it

  28. A test of 3 definitions Fruchterman-Reingold (FR) plot of a single species on BSC. Lines represent possible reproduction events. Circular FR plot of partitions of CSC under T1 in the interval T0=0 to T=644. The picture shows one giant, connected lineage, and several small, isolated components (on the left). Clusters against time. Convergence to (typically) one PSC cluster. 60 runs, 10 for 6 random seeds each, from dcluster = 0.9 to 1.4 . Time goes left to right, the clustering constant increases right to left. Vertical axis shows number of clusters.

  29. 1. The BSC. Although refined many times since its introduction (cf. Chung, 2003), the main feature (or grouping criterion) of the BSC has remained unchanged: on the BSC, a species corresponds to a maximal group of potentially interbreeding organisms (a „Mendelian” population) that are reproductively isolated from other organisms.

  30. 2. The CSC. On the Cladistic Species Concept, a species is a (minimal) lineage of populations delineated by two branching events („points”) on the phylogenetic tree (Mishler–Donoghue, 1982). The grouping criterion in this family of concepts is the ancestral-descendant relation

  31. 3. The PSC. On the phenetic concept, a species is a cluster of similar organisms delimited with the aid of some statistical clustering method. The clustering is based on a huge number of characters of organisms.

  32. Back to Darwin

  33. So why is SP a problem? • Taxonomy, science, conceptualization… • Can they be simultaneously satisfied? • Species as • Individuals • Lineages • Clusters • Homeostatic systems • Sets, relations…

  34. Resources • http://plato.stanford.edu/entries/species/ • http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Species_Problem • Etc

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